The Contractual Fiancée
```Chapter Seven
The Bride Mark
A Romantic Suspense Novel by J. A. Jackson
```Midnight had always seemed like an invention to Olivia Jackson.
A number printed on clocks. A convenient dividing line between one day and the next. A dramatic hour used in fairy tales when carriages became pumpkins, masks slipped, promises expired, and women discovered too late that magic always came with conditions.
Until tonight.
Tonight, midnight felt alive.
It waited beyond the darkened windows of the Lake Tahoe cabin like a patient predator. It watched through the glass. It counted every breath she took and every second that passed while she stood before Rowan DeVille holding the sealed message from the Trust.
The cream-colored paper trembled between her fingers.
She read the final sentence again, although the words had already burned themselves into her mind.
Rowan Ambrose DeVille has agreed to surrender Olivia Jackson to Dr. Silas Graves before midnight.
She lifted her gaze.
Rowan stood on the opposite side of the massive stone fireplace. Firelight sharpened the planes of his face and turned his eyes almost black. He had not moved since she read the message aloud.
That frightened her more than denial would have.
“Say something.”
His jaw tightened.
“It’s a lie.”
“That is something.” She forced a humorless laugh. “It is not an explanation.”
Rowan took one careful step toward her.
Olivia stepped back.
The movement stopped him more effectively than a weapon.
Pain flashed across his face before control erased it.
“I did not agree to surrender you to Graves.”
“Your name is on the document.”
“A name can be forged.”
“Your signature?”
“Can be forged.”
“The seal of your family Trust?”
His gaze dropped to the embossed crest at the bottom of the page.
That brief hesitation was all the answer her fear needed.
Olivia’s chest tightened.
“You recognize it.”
“Yes.”
“Is it genuine?”
Rowan looked at her.
“Yes.”
The room seemed to tilt.
Outside, wind struck the cabin in a long, low howl. Snow swept against the windows like handfuls of white sand. The old timbers creaked overhead, responding to the storm with groans that sounded almost human.
Olivia tightened her grip on the message.
“Then tell me why your family’s genuine seal appears beneath a promise to give me to a man I barely know.”
“Because someone with access to the Trust wants you to believe I betrayed you.”
“Did you sign anything involving me?”
Silence.
Olivia’s anger rose quickly enough to burn through the coldness gathering inside her.
“Rowan.”
“Not that.”
“That was not my question.”
“I signed a covenant when I was twenty-one.”
“A covenant concerning what?”
His eyes held hers.
“The woman named by the Trust.”
Her heartbeat faltered.
“Me.”
“I didn’t know your name then.”
“But you agreed to something.”
“To protect her.”
“From whom?”
Before he could answer, a voice moved through the cabin.
It did not come from the doorway.
It did not come from upstairs.
It seemed to rise through the floorboards beneath Olivia’s feet.
“He sold you before you ever met.”
Olivia froze.
Rowan moved instantly.
One second he stood near the fireplace. The next, he was in front of her, placing his body between hers and the center of the room.
“Who’s there?”
No answer came.
Rowan reached behind his back and withdrew a compact black pistol Olivia had not known he was carrying.
She stared at it.
“You brought a gun to our fake-engagement getaway?”
“I brought a gun to a remote cabin connected to a Trust that has been manipulating both of our families for generations.”
“You make that sound reasonable.”
“Stay behind me.”
“That is not an answer.”
“It’s the only one that matters while someone is inside this house.”
Rowan crossed the living room, testing the front door, then the windows. Each remained locked from the inside. He checked the kitchen, pantry, rear entrance, and narrow mudroom while Olivia followed at a distance, gripping the Trust message like a shield.
They found no footprints.
No open windows.
No disturbed locks.
And no human being.
Yet Olivia could still feel the voice inside her body.
Not merely heard.
Felt.
A vibration traveling through bone.
Rowan returned to the fireplace and crouched beside the hearth. He passed one hand along the stonework, studying gaps darkened by age.
“There may be an old speaking tube,” he said.
“In a cabin?”
“Old houses had stranger things.”
“That did not sound like someone speaking through a tube.”
He glanced over his shoulder.
“What did it sound like?”
Olivia looked down at the worn pine floor.
“Like the house knew me.”
His expression changed.
Not surprise.
Recognition.
She hated that expression.
“What aren’t you telling me?”
“A great deal.”
“At least you are finally being honest.”
“Honesty and disclosure are not the same thing.”
“That sounds exactly like something a guilty man would say.”
Rowan rose.
“You think I don’t understand that?”
His voice stayed quiet, but the restraint in it stretched thin.
“You think I don’t know how this looks? A contract forces you into an engagement with a man you distrust. Strange things begin happening. You discover my name attached to a promise that seems to place you in danger. Every explanation I give requires you to believe in things no reasonable person should accept.”
“Then give me an unreasonable explanation.”
“You may never look at me the same way again.”
“I am beginning to think I have never looked at you clearly.”
That struck him.
For several seconds, they stood facing one another while the wind rattled the cabin.
Olivia remembered the moments when Rowan had seemed less like an arrogant stranger and more like a man carrying a private wound.
The way he had caught her when she slipped near the lake.
The warmth of his hand at her waist.
The quiet tenderness in his voice when he spoke of people he had failed to save.
The dangerous softness that entered his eyes whenever he forgot their engagement was supposed to be false.
None of it erased the document.
None of it explained Dr. Graves.
And none of it made the voice beneath the floor less real.
Rowan lowered the pistol but did not put it away.
“My family believed the Trust would eventually name a woman capable of opening something called the Archive.”
Olivia’s fingers tightened around the paper.
“Queen Califia’s Archive.”
“Yes.”
“You knew it existed.”
“I knew my grandfather believed it existed.”
“And now?”
His gaze traveled around the room.
“Now I believe my grandfather knew more than he told me.”
“What is in the Archive?”
“Records. Artifacts. Maps. Possibly proof of a history deliberately hidden from the world.”
The scholar in Olivia stirred despite her fear.
Hidden history had always called to her.
Old journals had never seemed dead in her hands. Paper breathed. Ink remembered. Margins preserved thoughts their writers had not dared place in the center of the page.
But this was no research assignment.
This was her life.
“Why would opening it require me?”
“The Trust never explained.”
“And Graves?”
“My grandfather called him the Keeper.”
“That does not sound ominous at all.”
“Graves is a historian, physician, anthropologist, and professional liar. He has served the Trust longer than I have been alive.”
“How much longer?”
Rowan’s answer came reluctantly.
“My grandfather’s notes mention a Dr. Silas Graves in 1951.”
Olivia stared at him.
“The man we met cannot be old enough to have practiced medicine in 1951.”
“I know.”
“Is it a family name?”
“Maybe.”
“You don’t believe that.”
“No.”
Something struck beneath the floor.
Once.
Hard enough to make the fire irons tremble against the hearth.
Rowan raised the pistol again.
A second impact followed, farther across the room.
Then a third.
It sounded as though someone moved below them, testing the floor from underneath.
Olivia turned slowly.
Near the old writing desk, one of the wide pine boards had risen slightly at one end.
“Was that like that before?”
Rowan followed her gaze.
“No.”
They approached together.
The board lifted another fraction of an inch.
Dust rose around its edges.
Rowan bent, hooked his fingers beneath it, and pulled.
Ancient nails protested as the plank came free.
Beneath it lay no crawlspace.
Instead, they found a shallow compartment lined with blackened cedar. Inside rested a narrow wooden box carved with spirals, stars, and symbols Olivia recognized immediately.
She dropped to her knees.
“I have seen these before.”
“Where?”
“In the Califia journals.”
Rowan crouched beside her.
Their shoulders touched.
Neither moved away.
Olivia traced the air above the carvings without making contact.
“This symbol appears beside references to a woman whose name was deliberately removed. Every place it should have appeared, the original scribe scraped the parchment clean.”
“What does the symbol mean?”
“I thought it meant keeper, guardian, or witness.”
“You thought?”
“The dialect predates most surviving translations. The meaning changes depending on how the lines are arranged.”
A circle surrounded by seven points had been carved into the center of the lid. From the circle descended two curved lines that met like an open doorway.
Olivia leaned closer.
“This version is different.”
“Different how?”
“The doorway is open.”
The mark pulsed beneath her gaze.
Olivia blinked.
The carved lines were dark again.
“Did you see that?”
“See what?”
She should have stopped.
Every sensible instinct warned her not to touch the box.
But curiosity had always been Olivia’s most loyal weakness.
She placed two fingers against the circle.
Light exploded beneath her hand.
Hot-fuchsia and gold fire raced through the carvings. It illuminated the symbols one by one until the entire box glowed like an ember lifted from some ancient furnace.
Rowan caught her wrist.
“Let go of it.”
She tried.
Her hand would not move.
The cabin vanished.
For one impossible second, Olivia stood on a cliff above a blue sea beneath a sun larger than any she had ever seen.
Women surrounded her.
Warriors.
Scholars.
Queens.
Their skin ranged from deep mahogany to warm bronze. Gold circlets gleamed against dark hair. Some wore armor fashioned from leather and hammered metal. Others held scrolls, staffs, and blades.
At the cliff’s edge stood a woman taller than the rest.
A golden crown rested upon her braided hair.
Her eyes found Olivia’s.
Recognition passed between them.
Not the recognition of strangers.
The recognition of blood.
“The Bride has returned.”
Olivia gasped.
The vision shattered.
She fell backward against Rowan.
He wrapped one arm around her waist and pulled her away from the box. The glowing carvings extinguished instantly.
The room plunged into darkness.
The fire had gone out.
Not diminished.
Gone.
Every ember lay black inside the hearth.
Olivia could hear Rowan’s breathing near her ear.
Could feel his arm locked around her.
Could feel the pounding of his heart against her back.
“What did you see?” he asked.
Before she could answer, footsteps sounded overhead.
Slow.
Measured.
Crossing the second floor directly above them.
Rowan released her and rose.
Olivia caught his sleeve.
“You were downstairs.”
“I am aware.”
The footsteps continued.
One floorboard groaned.
Then another.
Whoever walked upstairs moved toward the attic staircase.
Rowan activated the flashlight on his phone.
“Stay here.”
“Absolutely not.”
“Olivia.”
“Someone just announced that I am a returned bride while glowing symbols attached themselves to my hand. I am not remaining alone beside the haunted box.”
“It isn’t haunted.”
A heavy object crashed upstairs.
Olivia lifted one eyebrow.
Rowan exhaled.
“Stay close.”
They climbed the staircase together.
The hallway waited in darkness. Their bedroom doors stood open, although Olivia distinctly remembered closing hers.
Cold air flowed from the far end of the corridor.
The attic door stood ajar.
Rowan moved in front of her.
He pushed the door wider with the barrel of the gun.
Narrow wooden steps disappeared upward.
Another footstep sounded above them.
Olivia followed Rowan into the attic.
Dust floated through the beam of his flashlight. Trunks and covered furniture crowded the sloping space beneath the roof. Snow hissed against small circular windows at either end.
No person stood waiting.
Yet something had changed.
White sheets had been pulled from a row of objects along the wall.
Portraits.
Dozens of them.
Olivia approached the nearest frame.
The painting depicted a Black woman wearing a dark blue gown trimmed in silver. Her hair had been arranged in the fashion of the late eighteenth century, though a narrow golden braid circled her crown in a style that seemed far older.
The woman’s face stopped Olivia’s breath.
It was her face.
Not similar.
Not suggestive.
Hers.
The same high cheekbones. The same wide-set eyes. The same small line between the brows that appeared when she was skeptical.
Beneath the portrait, a tarnished brass plate read:
ISADORA JACKSON — 1796
Olivia stepped toward the next.
Another woman with her face stood beside a California mission wall.
MARIA OLIVIA JACKSON — 1824.
The next wore a riding coat and held a rolled map.
ELISE JACKSON — 1849.
Another wore a high-necked Victorian dress.
Another stood beside a 1920s automobile.
Another wore the uniform of a World War II nurse.
Another stood beneath the redwoods in the 1970s.
Every woman looked like Olivia.
Every woman bore the same mark near her left collarbone.
A circle surrounded by seven points.
Beneath it, two curved lines formed an open doorway.
“The Bride Mark,” Rowan said behind her.
Olivia turned.
“You know what it is.”
He did not answer.
“Who are these women?”
“Guardians.”
“Why do they have my face?”
“I don’t know.”
“You are lying.”
“I know what my family believed. That doesn’t mean I know why.”
She backed away from him and bumped into an oval mirror propped against an old steamer trunk.
The mirror’s silvered surface rippled.
Olivia saw herself wearing a white gown.
Not the sweater and jeans she had put on after dinner.
A wedding gown.
Its neckline shimmered with tiny golden symbols. Her hair fell in long dark waves over her shoulders. Behind her stood a man dressed in black.
His face remained hidden.
A blade gleamed in his hand.
Olivia spun around.
No one stood there.
Heat flared beneath her collarbone.
She cried out and grabbed the neck of her sweater.
Rowan was beside her immediately.
“What happened?”
“It burns.”
She pulled the fabric away from her skin.
Light glowed beneath her fingers.
Rowan went still.
The expression on his face terrified her.
“No,” he whispered.
Olivia lowered her hand.
The Bride Mark shone against her skin.
Hot-fuchsia fire outlined the circle. Gold light traced the seven points and descended through the open doorway.
Rowan’s face drained of color.
“It’s happening too soon.”
“What is happening?”
“We need to leave.”
“Not until you tell me what this means.”
“It means the Archive has recognized you.”
“Recognized me as what?”
Rowan gripped her shoulders.
“As the one person capable of opening it.”
“Why is that dangerous?”
“Because opening the Archive requires two people.”
“The bride and the guardian?”
“The bride and the man bound to her.”
The false engagement ring on Olivia’s hand suddenly tightened.
She looked down.
A thread of gold light had appeared beneath the metal.
It traveled from the ring across her skin and wound around Rowan’s wrist.
He released her, but the light remained.
“The contract,” Olivia said.
“It was never only a legal agreement.”
Rage cut through her fear.
“You knew.”
“Not all of it.”
“You knew enough to let me sign.”
“I was trying to keep the Trust from choosing someone worse.”
“Someone worse than the man accused of selling me?”
“Yes.”
His answer came with such fierce certainty that she stopped.
“Who?”
The windows exploded.
Glass flew inward from both ends of the attic.
Rowan threw Olivia to the floor and covered her with his body. Shards struck the walls, frames, and rafters.
A roaring wind invaded the cabin.
Snow spiraled through the attic in glittering white ribbons.
Below them, every door slammed at once.
Candles ignited throughout the house.
Olivia could see their flames through cracks in the floorboards, dozens of tiny points burning in rooms where no candles had stood.
A voice rolled through the cabin.
Ancient.
Powerful.
Neither male nor female.
“The Bride has been chosen.”
The light beneath Olivia’s collarbone blazed.
Pain moved through her—not the tearing pain of injury, but something deeper. It felt as though an old lock inside her had turned.
Images poured into her mind.
A stone chamber beneath the mountains.
Shelves of golden books.
A crown resting inside glass.
A black door marked with her name.
And Dr. Graves standing before it with blood on his hands.
The vision vanished.
Silence fell.
Rowan lifted himself enough to look at her.
“Are you hurt?”
“Get off me.”
He did so immediately.
Olivia pushed herself upright.
“No more partial truths.”
Rowan looked toward the broken window, then back at her.
“The mark identifies the Guardian Bride.”
“I gathered that.”
“According to my grandfather, the Archive cannot be forced open. It must recognize a woman from the original bloodline.”
“Queen Califia’s bloodline.”
“Yes.”
“You believe I am her descendant.”
“The Trust believes it.”
“And you?”
His gaze moved to the glowing mark.
“I believe the evidence is becoming difficult to ignore.”
“What happens when I open the Archive?”
“No one knows.”
“That is not good enough.”
“The last Guardian Bride disappeared before she could open it.”
Olivia glanced at the portraits.
“Which woman?”
Rowan pointed to a portrait from the 1970s.
The brass plate read:
OPHELIA JACKSON — 1978
Olivia moved closer.
Ophelia stood beneath towering redwoods wearing flared jeans and a rust-colored jacket. Her expression was defiant. Her left hand rested on the hood of an old blue Ford.
Beside her stood a young man.
A DeVille.
Olivia knew it from the eyes.
“Who is he?”
Rowan’s voice became almost inaudible.
“My grandfather.”
Olivia turned sharply.
“Your grandfather was bound to her?”
“Yes.”
“What happened?”
“He claimed Graves took her.”
“And no one found her?”
“No.”
“Did your grandfather agree to surrender her too?”
The accusation struck hard.
Rowan did not defend his grandfather.
“I don’t know.”
Olivia looked at the portraits again.
The women no longer seemed like historical curiosities.
They seemed like warnings.
“You said the message was altered.”
“I believe it was.”
“Prove it.”
They returned downstairs.
The candles had extinguished themselves. The fireplace burned again, though neither of them had relit it.
Rowan placed the Trust message on the dining table and examined it beneath the beam of a lantern.
Olivia watched him separate the pages.
“The paper is too thick,” he said.
“It feels normal.”
“The Trust uses handmade sheets. Each page should weigh almost exactly the same.”
He held the final sheet near the fire.
A shadow appeared inside it.
Rowan used a thin knife from the kitchen to separate two layers that had been pressed together.
A hidden page slid free.
The handwriting was old, angular, and written in brown ink.
Rowan stared at it.
“My grandfather wrote this.”
Olivia read the single sentence.
Never trust Dr. Graves unless he already knows your true name.
“What does that mean?”
“I don’t know.”
“What is your true name?”
“Rowan Ambrose DeVille.”
“That is your full name. The message says true name.”
He studied her.
“In some traditions, a true name is not the name given at birth. It is the name that describes what a person is.”
“And what are you?”
Something dangerous moved through his expression.
“That depends on who is asking.”
The lights died.
The refrigerator stopped humming.
The small clock above the stove went dark.
A moment later, the emergency generator coughed once beneath the cabin and failed.
Rowan turned toward the front window.
“Someone is outside.”
Olivia followed his gaze.
A figure stood beyond the porch at the edge of the snow-covered trees.
Tall.
Motionless.
Dressed in a long dark coat.
Snow blew around the figure without touching it.
Rowan reached the door.
“Do not open that.”
“If it’s human, I want answers.”
“And if it isn’t?”
He looked back at her.
“Then I want it farther away from you.”
Rowan opened the door.
Wind rushed inside.
The figure had vanished.
No footprints crossed the snow.
No broken branches marked a path into the forest.
Something rested in the center of the porch.
An antique ring.
Rowan bent to retrieve it.
“Don’t touch it,” Olivia said.
“For once, we agree.”
He used a folded handkerchief to pick it up.
The ring was heavy yellow gold set with a deep blue stone. Tiny symbols had been engraved around the band.
Olivia recognized the Bride Mark inside it.
“It was made for one of the women upstairs.”
Rowan turned the ring toward the lantern.
“There are initials.”
“Whose?”
His face hardened.
“O.J. and R.D.”
Ophelia Jackson.
Rowan’s grandfather.
The missing Guardian Bride and the man bound to protect her.
Rowan carried the ring inside and placed it on the table.
“We leave now.”
“The road is buried.”
“There is an emergency snow vehicle in the detached garage.”
“Of course there is.”
While Rowan went to retrieve their coats and keys, Olivia remained beside the table.
The blue stone caught the firelight.
A whisper slipped across the room.
Not from the floor this time.
From the ring.
“Olivia.”
She took one step closer.
The blue stone brightened.
“Olivia Jackson.”
Her fingers moved before reason could stop them.
She lifted the ring.
Cold traveled through her hand.
A woman’s voice filled her mind.
“Do not let him take you below.”
“Who?”
The answer came in a broken whisper.
“Rowan Ambrose DeVille.”
Olivia nearly dropped the ring.
The voice repeated his name.
Again.
And again.
Rowan Ambrose DeVille.
Rowan Ambrose DeVille.
Rowan Ambrose DeVille.
Footsteps approached from the hallway.
Olivia slipped the ring into her pocket.
Rowan entered carrying their coats.
His gaze moved immediately to the table.
“Where is the ring?”
Before Olivia could answer, the stone fireplace groaned.
A deep mechanical sound vibrated through the cabin.
Rowan dropped the coats.
The massive iron fireback behind the flames shifted.
Olivia stepped away as the burning logs rolled forward without spilling onto the floor.
Stone scraped against stone.
The entire back wall of the fireplace rotated inward.
Behind it appeared a narrow staircase descending into darkness.
Cold air rushed upward.
It smelled of wet stone, cedar smoke, and something older.
Something buried.
Rowan approached the opening.
“This tunnel is not on the property plans.”
“The ring warned me not to let you take me below.”
He turned.
“You touched it?”
“It spoke to me.”
“What did it say?”
Olivia hesitated.
His eyes narrowed.
“Olivia.”
“It said not to let you take me down there.”
Rowan stared into the tunnel.
“Then whoever left the ring knew this entrance would open.”
“Or the woman who owned it knew.”
“Ophelia has been dead for nearly fifty years.”
“You said she disappeared.”
“No one survives fifty years underground.”
A voice floated up the staircase.
Soft.
Male.
Familiar.
“Welcome home, Olivia.”
Rowan raised his pistol and shone his flashlight into the passage.
The stone steps descended farther than the beam could reach.
Symbols covered the walls.
At the bottom of the visible staircase, two points of light opened in the darkness.
Eyes.
Watching them.
Rowan stopped breathing.
The figure below moved one step forward.
Part of a face entered the light.
An older man.
Silver hair.
Sharp cheekbones.
A familiar DeVille mouth.
Rowan’s weapon lowered by an inch.
“That’s impossible.”
The man smiled.
“You always were too certain of what was possible, boy.”
Olivia looked from the man to Rowan.
Rowan’s face had gone completely still.
“Who is he?”
Rowan did not answer.
The man below lifted his chin.
“Tell her.”
Rowan’s voice broke on the words.
“My grandfather.”
Olivia stared down the staircase.
“The man from Ophelia’s portrait?”
“Yes.”
“You said he was dead.”
Rowan tightened his grip on the pistol.
“I buried him fifteen years ago.”
His grandfather’s smile widened.
“No, Rowan.”
He took another step into the light.
The Bride Mark glowed on his palm.
“You buried the man who tried to save Olivia from you.”
End of Chapter Seven
```Cliff-hanger: The man Rowan buried fifteen years earlier is alive beneath the cabin—and claims Rowan is the true danger to Olivia.
```Next Chapter
```Chapter Eight
The Man Beneath the Mountain
Rowan must confront the grandfather he believed was dead, while Olivia discovers that the Bride Mark may not belong to one woman—and that the hidden passage beneath the cabin leads directly toward Queen Califia’s lost Archive.
```© J. A. Jackson. All Rights Reserved.



